Where 2009 saw the birth of the hugely popular Boys on Film brand 2010 picks up where Boys On Film 3: American Boy left off with nine award-winning and hotly anticipated short films about objects of desire and whether the attaining of them is worth the struggle. Elliot Tittensor (TV's Shameless) stars as Daz in headlining film Protect Me From What I Want a gripping British film debut that sees him woo a young lad in an underpass only to be threatened with a break-up the following morning. Passive and submissive roles are tackled and tugged in gay graffiti tale Vandals and Icelandic grapple-fest Wrestling while Postmortem My Name is Love and Iris Prize winner Steam look at promising encounters that turn awry. Rounding out the collection are Heiko an alternative ode to foot fetishes French farmyard fantasy Far West and Breath where 12 year old Erik swims out to sea to make a daring move on his best friend's father.
When Troy (Murray Bartlett, Farscape) moves back to LA after many years in Barcelona he finds that his ex-boyfriend Jonathan (Daniel Dugan) has begun dating Raul (Adrian Gonzales), a handsome South American immigrant. Jonathan has helped Raul stay in America, but when Raul senses the sexual tension between the exes, temperatures rise between the three men in LA’s stultifying summer heat. From Eldar Rapaport, director of award-winning short films ‘Post Mortem’ and ‘Steam’, comes a languorous, lyrical exploration of love split three ways.
Where 2009 saw the birth of the hugely popular Boys on Film brand 2010 picks up where Boys On Film 3: American Boy left off with nine award-winning and hotly anticipated short films about objects of desire and whether the attaining of them is worth the struggle. Elliot Tittensor (TV's Shameless) stars as Daz in headlining film Protect Me From What I Want a gripping British film debut that sees him woo a young lad in an underpass only to be threatened with a break-up the following morning. Passive and submissive roles are tackled and tugged in gay graffiti tale Vandals and Icelandic grapple-fest Wrestling while Postmortem My Name is Love and Iris Prize winner Steam look at promising encounters that turn awry. Rounding out the collection are Heiko an alternative ode to foot fetishes Breath where 12 year old Erik swims out to sea to make a daring move on his best friend's father and the Oscar-winning short film Trevor.
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